November 30, 2005: [achtung! kunst] *exhibitions* : Dallas, Crow: "True Words" - Cambridge, Sackler: Evocative Creatures - Toronto, ROM: Re-opening Asian Galleries - Taipei, MOMA: Contemporary Photography - Mono-ha and Lee Ufan |
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DALLAS, TX.-The Crow Collection of Asian Art, located in downtown The eight artists live with their adopted guardians in a remote village The artists’ highly developed visual vocabularies are presented in “The Crow Collection of Asian Art is proud to bring this distinctive In celebration of this exhibit, The Crow Collection of Asian Art
will The Trammell & Margaret Crow Collection of Asian Art contains
more than http://www.artdaily.com/section/news/index.asp?int_sec=2&int_new=15572 *************************** artdaily.com, 11/20/2005 CAMBRIDGE, MA.-The Arthur M. Sackler Museum presents Evocative Through paintings, ceramics, sculptures, jades, and textiles from
the [image] Gibbons Playing in an Old Tree along the Banks of a Stream, http://www.artdaily.com/section/news/index.asp?int_sec=2&int_new=15546
NYT, November 20, 2005 The Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto will open 10 renovated galleries
on The highlights include newly restored temple wall paintings from
the The Gallery of Chinese Architecture, the first of its kind in North The opening of the galleries will complete the first stage of the Information: (416) 586-5549 or www.rom.on.ca. http://travel2.nytimes.com/2005/11/20/travel/20advmuseum.html?pagewanted=print
Taipei Times, Thursday, Nov 10 If you didn't make the gala party last week at the British Trade and Cultural Office Residence in Yangmingshan, the first time an exhibition of local art has been shown at a diplomatic residence, you can still see the avant-garde art that was exhibited and which is now being shown at the Taipei MOMA Gallery. Entitled A Peep into Taiwanese Contemporary Photography the exhibition brings together several of the hottest Taiwanese artists working today. The party was an important event as it merged two audiences that normally do not cross paths: those working in the foreign services and those in the art world. The exhibition helped to broaden the audience for the local art while also highlighting the importance of cultural exchanges. The concise exhibition at the gallery contains digital imagery, video
and photographs by some of the top Taiwanese artists and provides
a general overview of what is happening currently in art. This is
a great opportunity to see the work of some of the best artists in
Taiwan. For some flashy images, Hung Tung-lu's (洪東祿) lenticular boxes which combine manga-style nubile queens with a Western art-historical image; while Peng Hung-chih's (彭弘智) costumed-clad mutts doing it doggy-style provide quite a chuckle. Wu Tien-chang's (吳天章) disturbing burlesque and grotesque tandem cyclists
broadly provide synchronous smiles in a large digital work that is
partly cynical while being aesthetically pleasing; while Chang Chien-chi's
(張乾琦) The Chain gives us a glimpse of unbearable reality. On view are two video works that range from deeply somber to sidesplitting slapstick. Chen Chieh-ren's (陳界仁) has a DVD shot of the Majestic Tower, a utopic site, but in reality a disused factory that symbolizes the faded hopes and dreams of the local populace. In contrast, the lighthearted and humorous videos of Tsui Kuang-yu (崔廣 宇) are on view, in which he knocks over a flock of pigeons with a bowling bowl. Taipei MOMA Gallery is at 3F, 19, Ln 252, Dunhua S Rd, Sec 1, Taipei (台 北市大安區敦化南路一段252巷19號3樓). Call (02) 8771 3372. Besides this, there are several exhibitions about town. If you're still in a photographic mood, then go to TIVAC to see its current show of Taiwanese and German photographers. Taiwan International Visual Arts Center, 1 F, 29, Ln 45, Liaoning Street (台北市遼寧街45巷29號1樓). Call (02) 2773 3347. Song of the Wanderer -- Taiwan German Photography Exhibition includes work by Ulrike Myrzik and Manfred Jarisch, with the theme "Architecture of the Homeless." Ho Ching-tai (何經泰) and Jiang Shih-Shien (江思賢) show their documentary-style photos of homeless people. At the Main Trend Gallery there is a solo show by Chang Chen-jen (張正 仁) titled Parallelism that features collages and small sculptural installations. For all you art history buffs, Main Trend is known for its well-researched publications (now defunct, but still collectible) about the local art scene. Main Trend Gallery (大趨勢畫廊) is at 209-1, Chengde Rd, Sec 3, Taipei (台北市大同區承德路三段209-1號). Taking place simultaneously, in Kaohsiung at the Sin Pin Pier and at the Birmingham Institute of Art and Design in Birmingham, England, Seesaw is a conceptual art exhibition that tries to merge two time-zones via digital art. The exhibition includes the work of UK artists and of Taiwanese artists. Since the works are electronic, they disappear when switched off; therefore the art seesaws between the two cities separated by an eight-hour time difference. Hsu Su-chen (許淑真) is one of the artists who recently finished an art residency in the UK and works prolifically as an artist and curator. If you are unable to travel to either place, the work can be seen in cyberspace at www.seesawsite.net. http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/feat/archives/2005/11/10/2003279621
The Japan Times, Nov. 10, 2005 In October 1968 Nobuo Sekine dug a hole in the ground, shaped the
extracted dirt into a large cylinder and called the work "Phase
-- Mother Earth." It was probably an experiment, influenced by
discussions of the new Land Art and Minimalist works taking place
in the United States. When it was first constructed, the prevailing view in Japan was that it was a kind of quirky visual play of positive and negative spaces. But artist Lee Ufan disagreed, claiming that this was actually the end of visual manipulation; it was in fact a real time, real life absence and presence presented in temporal juxtaposition -- a before and an after. This, Sekine's piece and Lee's comment, is typically pointed to as the founding moment of Japan's influential, homegrown Mono-ha art movement. Born into the post-war years and the supposed ruins of consumer culture, a small group of artists were attempting to create a new, utopian reality. They proceeded as if art might be re-enchanted by shifting attention away from the objectification of images and to the creation of a world of encounters, with everyday objects, that might end up looking like mythic gestures. Mono-ha, literally "the school of things," was initially an informal term -- sometimes used derisively -- that brought together loosely affiliated artists around Tokyo including Sekine, Lee, Susumu Koshimizu, Katsuro Yoshida, and 12 or so others. From 1968 to the mid '70s, these artists used natural materials such as charcoal, stones and earth or manufactured ones such as acrylic sheets, girders and glass. More practically, the overriding tenet was that plain materials be used without doing much of anything to them. This prevented the presentation of the material from being artificially constrained by the limited perspective of an individual artist's ego. Time and space were valued more, and so were relationships to the surrounding world in all their Zen-like interconnectedness and ephemerality. News photo Lee's "System A" (1969), for example, is a large cube of cotton wool to which steel plates are attached to the flanks, exploring tensions between soft and hard, natural and man-made, and Koshimizu made giant paper envelopes that contain slabs of rock, like "Paper 2" (1969). Mono-ha fizzled out by the mid-'70s as its members took to various alternative creative directions, and only retrospectively, like many groups, did it really seem cohesive. Its legacy, however, is unlikely to fade: the movement is largely synonymous with the beginnings of contemporary art in Japan, especially as a modern Asian aesthetic untrammeled by imported Western preoccupations. Much of the daily work of museums and art historians is to tell stories about artists and art movements, locating pivotal moments and seminal works, while serving up plausible explanations for the motives behind the pieces. So it goes with Osaka's National Museum of Art's "Reconsidering Mono-ha." The gist of the show is to revise the commonly accepted belief that Mono-ha got under way with Sekine's "Phase -- Mother Earth." The Osaka show chooses instead to locate Mono-ha's beginnings in the uncertainties of perception -- optical puzzles of juxtaposition, line and color, like those found in university psychology textbooks -- that characterized many 1960s Japanese paintings and sculptures. This was, actually, the approach that Lee rejected in his original comments on "Phase -- Mother Earth." But in "Reconsidering Mono-ha," Sekine's mentor Jiro Takamatsu (b.1936) is accorded a founding role for his influential "Shadow" paintings of the 1960s that played with perspective or depicted source-less silhouettes on the canvas. Sekine had been Takamatsu's assistant, and toyed with eye-deceiving works like the seemingly circular painting "Phase No.5," a contemporaneous work of "Phase -- Mother Earth." From these origins in visually challenging the surety of seeing, artists would ultimately move to more conceptual explorations of materials. The National Museum of Art, Osaka, isn't the only place where the period is being reconsidered. As the leading Mono-ha artist/philosopher/critic, Lee has been dealing with the movements' emphasis on space, time and minimally reductive use of materials for nearly 40 years. Some 36 recent sculptures and paintings are currently at the artist's solo show, "The Art of Margins," at the Yokohama Museum of Art till Dec. 23. Since his revelation during "Phase -- Mother Earth," Lee's
approach has been to resist definite forms. By using repetitive practices
that slowly dissolve through variation and contrast over decades,
his pieces remain ultimately incomplete. His current paintings are
similar to early works that attempt to fashion a space for correspondences
between the painted and unpainted areas. And much like Robert Ryman,
a fellow winner of the Praemium Imperiale, it's as if he were searching
for the beginnings of painting itself -- the application of pigment
to a surface, resulting in a multiplication of relations. In the end, the Osaka show does not dislodge the importance of "Phase -- Mother Earth," or Lee's understanding of it, but broadens the context of its inception. Installation and site-specific artists, for whom the placement of a piece is everything, have essentially embraced Mono-ha's principles -- much as Lee did after observing Sekine's revolutionary work 40 years earlier. Mono-ha artists were truly the progenitors of such art as has now become seamlessly absorbed within, and a staple of, contemporary art. Lee's recent work reminds us that he remains one of its leaders. "Reconsidering Mono-ha" is at the National Museum of Art, Osaka, till Dec. 18; open 10 a.m.-5 p.m., closed Mondays. For more information, visit www.nmao.go.jp "Lee Ufan -- The Art of Margins" is at the Yokohama Museum of Art till Dec. 23; open 10 a.m.-6 p.m. (8 p.m. on Fridays), closed Thursdays. For more information, visit www.yma.city.yokohama.jp http://www.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/getarticle.pl5?fa20051110a1.htm
__________________ with kind regards, Matthias Arnold
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